Positionen | Anchorage–Homer Sterling Highway Self-Guided Driving Audio Tour
Anchorage–Homer Sterling Highway Self-Guided Driving Audio Tour
(1) Bewertungen
Anchorage
Über uns
Drive from Anchorage to Homer on a self-guided audio tour packed with wildlife, glaciers, and coastal views. Four must-see stops lead the way: Potter Marsh Bird Sanctuary, Beluga Point, the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, and Homer Spit. Follow Turnagain Arm, detour into Portage Valley for Portage Glacier and Byron Glacier Trail, then cruise past Kenai Lake and Cooper Landing before rolling into Homer for overlooks, beaches, and big-sky sunsets.
Purchase one tour per car, not per person. Everyone listens together!
After booking, you can check your email before downloading the Tour Guide App by Action, entering your unique password, and accessing your tour. The preceding steps require ...
Höhepunkte
Von 1 Stunde bis 10 Stunden
Angeboten in Englisch
Kostenlose Stornierung
Mobiles Ticket
Von 1 Stunde bis 10 Stunden
Angeboten in Englisch
Kostenlose Stornierung
Mobiles Ticket
Was ist enthalten?
Text transcripts of audio narration & Self-paced format (start/pause/resume anytime)
Pre-recorded audio commentary (downloadable or streamable)
This is a GPS-powered, self-guided audio tour that works through an app
Lifetime access (no expiration) with Customer support (chat/email)
This tour is NOT a ticket to any attraction or site
Suggested walking/driving itinerary with stop-by-stop directions
Offline GPS-enabled route map
NO in-person guide or physical equipment (bring your own device & headphones)
Start on Sterling Hwy (Route 1) near 94 Sterling Hwy #2, just north of Homer, with a gas station on your right and the ocean on your left. Suggested start; we’re not affiliated, so staff won’t have tour info. Audio auto-starts—check email/text for setup, download on strong internet.
Rückkehr
Wichtige Informationen
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Öffentliche Verkehrsmittel sind in der Nähe verfügbar
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Geeignet für alle körperlichen Fitnessniveaus
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So erhalten Sie Zugriff: Nach der Buchung erhalten Sie eine E-Mail und eine SMS mit Einrichtungsanweisungen und einem Passwort (suchen Sie in E-Mails und SMS nach „Audiotour“). • Laden Sie die separate Tour-App per Aktion herunter. • Geben Sie das per E-Mail und SMS gesendete Passwort ein. • Die Tour muss bei starkem WLAN/Mobilfunkempfang heruntergeladen werden. • Funktioniert nach dem Download offline.
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So starten Sie die Tour: Öffnen Sie vor Ort die separate Audio-Tourguide-App von Action. • Wenn nur eine Tour verfügbar ist, starten Sie diese. • Wenn mehrere Tourvarianten vorhanden sind, starten Sie die Variante mit Ihrem geplanten Startpunkt und der gewünschten Richtung.
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Gehen Sie zum Startpunkt. Am Startpunkt werden Sie nicht erwartet. Diese Tour ist selbstgeführt. Geben Sie den Punkt der ersten Geschichte ein, und der Ton beginnt automatisch. Folgen Sie den Audiohinweisen zur nächsten Geschichte, die ebenfalls automatisch abgespielt wird. Genießen Sie das freihändige Erkunden. Bei Audioproblemen wenden Sie sich an den Support. Halten Sie sich für ein optimales Erlebnis an die Tourroute und die Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung.
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Reisen Sie sorgenfrei: Nutzen Sie die Tour-App jederzeit, an jedem Tag und über mehrere Tage hinweg. Starten und pausieren Sie die Tour, wann immer Sie möchten, legen Sie Pausen ein und erkunden Sie Abstecher in Ihrem eigenen Tempo. Überspringen Sie alles, was Sie nicht interessiert, oder entdecken Sie Bonusinhalte für alles, was Sie interessiert
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Spartipps: Autotouren: Nur eine Tour für alle Mitfahrer buchen
Stornierungsbedingungen
Für eine vollständige Rückerstattung stornieren Sie mindestens 24 Stunden vor der geplanten Abflugzeit.
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Um eine vollständige Rückerstattung zu erhalten, müssen Sie mindestens 24 Stunden vor Beginn des Erlebnisses stornieren.
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Die Stornierungszeiten richten sich nach der Ortszeit des Erlebnisses.
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Wenn Sie weniger als 24 Stunden vor Beginn des Erlebnisses stornieren, wird der von Ihnen gezahlte Betrag nicht zurückerstattet.
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Für dieses Erlebnis ist eine Mindestanzahl von Reisenden erforderlich. Wenn es storniert wird, weil die Mindestanzahl nicht erreicht wird, erhalten Sie ein anderes Datum/Erlebnis oder eine vollständige Rückerstattung.
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Alle Änderungen, die weniger als 24 Stunden vor Beginn des Erlebnisses vorgenommen werden, können nicht akzeptiert werden.
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Anchorage–Homer Sterling Highway Self-Guided Driving Audio Tour
(1) Bewertungen
Anchorage
Datum und Reisende auswählen
Ab
$35.00
Preis variiert je nach Gruppengröße
Über uns
Drive from Anchorage to Homer on a self-guided audio tour packed with wildlife, glaciers, and coastal views. Four must-see stops lead the way: Potter Marsh Bird Sanctuary, Beluga Point, the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center, and Homer Spit. Follow Turnagain Arm, detour into Portage Valley for Portage Glacier and Byron Glacier Trail, then cruise past Kenai Lake and Cooper Landing before rolling into Homer for overlooks, beaches, and big-sky sunsets.
Purchase one tour per car, not per person. Everyone listens together!
After booking, you can check your email before downloading the Tour Guide App by Action, entering your unique password, and accessing your tour. The preceding steps require ...
Höhepunkte
Von 1 Stunde bis 10 Stunden
Angeboten in Englisch
Kostenlose Stornierung
Mobiles Ticket
Von 1 Stunde bis 10 Stunden
Angeboten in Englisch
Kostenlose Stornierung
Mobiles Ticket
Was ist enthalten?
Text transcripts of audio narration & Self-paced format (start/pause/resume anytime)
Pre-recorded audio commentary (downloadable or streamable)
This is a GPS-powered, self-guided audio tour that works through an app
Lifetime access (no expiration) with Customer support (chat/email)
This tour is NOT a ticket to any attraction or site
Suggested walking/driving itinerary with stop-by-stop directions
Offline GPS-enabled route map
NO in-person guide or physical equipment (bring your own device & headphones)
Start on Sterling Hwy (Route 1) near 94 Sterling Hwy #2, just north of Homer, with a gas station on your right and the ocean on your left. Suggested start; we’re not affiliated, so staff won’t have tour info. Audio auto-starts—check email/text for setup, download on strong internet.
Drive Alaska’s scenic Sterling Highway between Anchorage and Homer with a self-guided audio tour featuring coastal views, mountain landscapes, and memorable roadside stops. Please note that the same stops and stories are included in both directions along the Sterling Highway route.
It's known for its excellent birding, with about 130 different species found here. You might see bald eagles, northern pintails, Canada geese, canvasback ducks, northern harriers, Arctic terns, and trumpeter swans here, and that's just scratching the surface.
Note: The tour is over 118 Miles long per tour, with more than 90+ audio stories per tour, and takes about 2-3 hours to complete.
New, Lifetime access, no expiry. Use it anytime, on any trip, as many times as you want.
1 Stunde
2
Cook-Inlet
Der Chugach State Park ist der größte State Park des Landes. Er erstreckt sich über eine Fläche von einer halben Million Hektar. Es ist ein wunderschöner Park voller Seen, Tundra und einer Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Waldökosysteme.
0 Minute
3
Erholungsgebiet McHugh Creek
Von diesem Ausgangspunkt ist es nur ein kurzer Spaziergang zu einem sechs Meter hohen Wasserfall. Wenn wir nur einen kurzen Zwischenstopp einlegen möchten, sind wir in 10 Minuten wieder draußen – allerdings muss ich erwähnen, dass eine kleine Parkgebühr anfällt.
0 Minute
4
Beluga Point
The name comes from the fact that, yes, it can be a lucky spot to see beluga whales. These white whales are much smaller than some other whales, reaching only 12 to 16 feet in length.
10 Minuten
5
Indian Valley Mine & Gifts
Indian Valley Mine keeps Alaska’s gold-rush spirit alive, with a historic cabin, tiny museum, and a chance to try gold panning and keep what you find.
0 Minute
6
Bird Creek Trailhead
The Bird Creek Valley Trailhead is just ahead. Park in the lot if you’d like to stretch your legs for a quick hike. When you’re ready, drive back the way we came, then turn left onto the Seward Highway to continue the main tour.
0 Minute
7
Vogelpunkt
Bird Point is a quick, worthwhile stop with telescopes, beluga sculptures, and a peek at glacial striations carved into the rock, plus access to the Bird to Gird bike trail.
0 Minute
8
Girdwood
Girdwood is a can’t-miss stop, home to Alyeska Resort, glacier tours, and the Aerial Tram, plus a gold-rush past and a wild twist, the 1964 quake forced the whole town to relocate up the valley.
0 Minute
9
Alyeska Resort
Alyeska Resort is Girdwood’s main hub for year-round fun, hike or bike the trails, ride the 2,300-foot Aerial Tram for big views, or book a reservation-only Nordic Spa day.
0 Minute
10
Winner Creek Trail
Lower Winner Creek Trail is a 4-mile round-trip rainforest hike to a scenic gorge, with icy blue, glacier-fed creeks—park in the main lot and start near the base of Chair 7.
0 Minute
11
Crow Pass Trailhead
Crow Pass Trail follows the historic Iditarod route for glacier views, waterfalls, and wildflowers, or take the Alyeska Aerial Tram for the same big vistas with zero hiking.
1 Stunde
12
Chugach Nationalwald
Chugach National Forest spans over 5 million acres of wild Alaskan beauty, offering 500 miles of trails, epic fishing spots, and a perfect backdrop for your next photo at the entrance sign.
1 Stunde
13
Begich, Boggs Visitor Center
Portage Lake Loop Road leads to the Begich, Boggs Visitor Center and the Portage Glacier Day Lodge, with great lake views along the way, and you can buy boat tour tickets at the lodge if you haven’t booked yet.
0 Minute
14
Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center
Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center is a must for animal lovers, meet rescued Alaska wildlife like bears, wolves, moose, musk ox, and eagles, with optional guided tours and close encounters.
0 Minute
15
Moose Flats Day Use Area
Moose Flats is a quick wetland stop with a 0.5-mile interpretive trail and good odds of spotting Alaska’s massive moose, plus it’s the start of the flat 5-mile Trail of Blue Ice to the Portage Glacier visitor center.
1 Stunde
16
Entdecken Sie Glacier
Explorer Glacier View is a standout lookout with a huge icefield and a dramatic 400-foot waterfall pouring off the glacier.
0 Minute
17
Portage-See
Portage Lake is the icy-blue lake left behind as Portage Glacier retreated around the corner, and today it’s the waterway you cross by boat (or hike along) to get those up-close glacier views.
0 Minute
18
Portage-Gletscher
Portage Glacier is a towering, icy-blue wall of ice at the end of Portage Lake—once right beside the visitor center, but now best seen by boat tour or a hike as it’s retreated back around the bend.
10 Minuten
19
Byron Glacier Trailhead
Byron Glacier is a scenic, mostly flat 3-mile round-trip hike with snowfields and occasional ice caves (admire from outside), ending with a rewarding close-up view of the glacier.
10 Minuten
20
Hoffnung
Hope is a charming gold rush town on Turnagain Arm, where you can pan for gold in Resurrection Creek, visit the Hope-Sunrise Mining Museum, or hike the scenic Gull Rock and Hope Point Trails for incredible views.
0 Minute
21
Summit Lake
Summit Lake is a prime pullout for wildlife watching, especially loons—listen for their eerie calls, scan from the highway pullouts, or detour to Tenderfoot Campground for more time by the water.
0 Minute
22
Tern Lake
Tern Lake is a top wildlife stop—watch for moose in the shallows, mountain goats on the slopes, and black bears nearby, plus spring swans, late-July sockeye runs, and a handy fish-viewing platform at the picnic area.
0 Minute
23
Kenai Lake
Kenai Lake is a Kenai Peninsula showstopper, its vivid blue-green color comes from glacier-fed “glacial flour,” and yes, you can swim here if you’re up for a seriously refreshing dip.
0 Minute
24
Cooper Landing
Cooper Landing is a classic Kenai River stop—famous for salmon fishing and rafting, with a boat launch viewing deck for Dall sheep and mountain goats, plus a small local museum and good services for a quick pit stop.
0 Minute
25
Russian River Falls
Russian River Falls is a must-see during salmon season—watch thousands of sockeye leap up the falls each June and July, sometimes with bears fishing nearby, all from a flat, easy two-mile trail.
0 Minute
26
Kenai River
Kenai River follows Kenai Lake for 82 miles and is Alaska’s fishing superstar—packed with trout and Dolly Varden, plus sockeye, coho, pink, and legendary king salmon, and it even sparked “combat fishing” during peak runs.
0 Minute
27
Skilak Lake Road
Skilak Lake Road is an 18-mile gravel loop through prime wildlife habitat—best early morning for wolves, bears, lynx, and birds—but only attempt it with AWD and good clearance before rejoining Highway 1.
0 Minute
28
Skilak Lake
Skilak Lake is a wild, glacier-fed gem in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, known for big views, strong winds, and great chances to spot eagles, loons, and moose along its rugged shoreline.
0 Minute
29
Sterling
Sterling is the gateway to the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, a great spot for gas, food, or outdoor adventure. It’s famous for salmon fishing and for its two canoe routes—the 46-mile Swanson River Trail linking 40 lakes and the shorter Swan River Route. These scenic waterways wind through muskeg peat bogs rich with moss, orchids, and berries, showing off Alaska’s wilder side.
0 Minute
30
Soldotna
Soldotna is the Kenai River hub for world-class salmon fishing, riverfront trails, and an easy stop to refuel, grab food, and stock up before the next stretch.
0 Minute
31
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center and Headquarters
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center is the best quick stop for refuge info, interpretive exhibits, and a few easy nature trails with good chances for wildlife spotting.
10 Minuten
32
Arc Lake Park
A.R.C. Park is a small, easy break stop with a lake for paddling or fishing in summer (grayling and silver salmon), skating in winter, and trail links into the refuge and Tsalteshi system—watch for the left-turn pullout just before the lake.
10 Minuten
33
Tustumena Lake
Tustumena Lake is the Kenai Peninsula’s largest, a remote wilderness lake today—but around the late 1800s and early 1900s it supported trappers, miners, and homesteaders before fading back into quiet, cabin-dotted wild country.
0 Minute
34
Kasilof
Kasilof is a classic salmon town on the Kasilof River, with nearby state recreation sites for quick walks, camping, paddling, and fishing—plus a fun dipnetting scene at Kasilof River SRS and a Russian-era name dating back to an 1786 fort.
0 Minute
35
Kasilof River
To reach Kasilof River State Recreation Site, turn left onto Spetz Avenue just after crossing the river and passing the brown “Kasilof River” sign, then take an immediate left into the site.
0 Minute
36
Clam Gulch
Clam Gulch State Recreation Area is a scenic coastal stop known for its long sandy beach, wildflower-covered bluffs, and panoramic views of Cook Inlet and the Aleutian volcanoes—Redoubt, Spurr, and Iliamna. Though razor clamming has been closed since 2015 to protect the population, it’s still a lovely spot for camping, picnicking, and birdwatching, with chances to see bald eagles, cranes, and Arctic terns.
0 Minute
37
Ninilchik
Ninilchik is a charming seaside village with stunning Cook Inlet views and deep fishing roots. Stop by the Ninilchik and Deep Creek State Recreation Sites for beaches, campgrounds, and eagle or whale spotting. Don’t miss the historic Holy Transfiguration Russian Orthodox Church perched on the bluff with its iconic golden domes.
0 Minute
38
Deep Creek
Deep Creek is a popular Ninilchik-area coastal stop with a campground, beach access, and a tractor-assisted boat launch, plus great chances to spot bald eagles and sometimes whales or sea otters offshore.
0 Minute
39
Nikolaevsk
Nikolaevsk is a small Old Believer village founded in 1968, where many residents still speak Russian, follow traditional customs, and keep a quieter way of life on the Kenai Peninsula.
0 Minute
40
Anchor River State Recreation Area
Anchor River State Recreation Area is a great beach-and-camping stop where the river meets the sea, known for steelhead and salmon fishing, plus easy coastal walks, volcano views across Cook Inlet, and chances to spot eagles, belugas, and sea otters.
0 Minute
41
Homer
Homer is the grand finale of the Kenai Peninsula—Alaska’s halibut fishing capital and “City of Peonies.” Visit the 4.5-mile Homer Spit for seaside views, galleries, and seafood spots. The town buzzes with kayaking, wildlife cruises, bear-watching flights to Katmai or Lake Clark, and water taxis to Seldovia or Kachemak Bay State Park. Don’t miss the Pratt Museum, the Center for Alaskan Coastal Studies, and the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge headquarters for a taste of local art, science, and coastal ecology.
0 Minute
42
Homer Spit
Homer Spit is a 4.5-mile finger of land reaching into Kachemak Bay, packed with beaches, the harbor, shops and cafés, a campground, and outfitters for fishing, kayaking, and bear or wildlife tours—plus great chances to spot eagles, sea lions, seals, and jellyfish.